Lawyers representing George Zimmerman are fighting to get more of Trayvon Martin's personal records.

A hearing has been set for next week on the issue, according to newly released documents by Zimmerman's legal team:

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Zimmerman's defense team said they want to see Trayvon Martin's records from middle and high school, his cell phone, and access to posts the 17-year-old made on Facebook and Twitter.

School records are protected, and are usually not part of the public record without a court order. The state wants to ensure that the records remain out of the public record.

"Don't forget the state got my client's high school record before I even looked for Trayvon Martin's high school records, so I think, you know, the bar has been set. And in a case like this, we have to look and see what might be there and whether it's truly relevant information," said Zimmerman's attorney, Mark O'Mara.

O'Mara told News 13 he also has 50 to 75 witness depositions to take.

It's all evidence Zimmerman's lawyers think will help acquit their client of second-degree murder charges for shooting and killing the teen in February.

The motions are just some of the work O'Mara said his legal team has to do before their case is ready for trial.

"My anticipation that we would have a self-defense immunity hearing in the springtime. I'm still hoping for that timeline. That would then put the trial a couple months after that maybe. We have a lot of information. You noticed from the request, we asked for today that there is a lot of information that we don't have yet," said O'Mara.

Zimmerman has claimed self-defense, saying Trayvon Martin attacked him in his Sanford neighborhood. The teen was found to be unarmed at the time.

The latest motions requesting Martin's school, phone and online records make up the latest strategic move by defense attorney Mark O'Mara, who has already had one judge removed from the case, and also got his client out of jail on bond twice.

A hearing for the defense's latest motions is set for Friday, Oct. 19, at 1:30 p.m. It will be heard in front of a new judge, Debra Nelson, who replaced Judge Kenneth Lester after he was taken off the case.

Zimmerman remains free at an undisclosed location in Seminole County after posting $1 million bond.

"It's the same, I don't know what else you say to someone who is waiting to get to a trial to tell his story to a jury, but now has to stay in a virtual prison because he really can't walk the streets. He is leaving a little bit, he is sort of in disguise or otherwise protected, but for the most part 24/7, he has to be at the location he is at," said O'Mara.